Rank: Member
Groups: Registered
Joined: 1/27/2008(UTC) Posts: 2
|
Where to start? Dryer seems to take a very long time to dry clothes if at all. What I have done. 1. Cleaned vent duct and made sure that exhaust hose was free of kinks. 2. Run dryer disconnected from exhaust duct (just in case) 3. Measured power at wall socket 220VAC between both lines 120VAC each line to Ground. 4. Shined flash light down lint trap saw nothing put hand into dryer exhaust port as far as I could found nothing. 5. Examined heater element through view hole on top appears that all coils are turning on. 6. Checked continuity SP? across the two heater leads while disconnected from wiring. checked good. 7. Observed heaters while unit is running. Found the turn on and off. This is because the cycling thermostat Does that sound right? 8. Found that while heaters are running they draw 22.5 amps per leg. 9. Checked Thermal fuse is good. 10. I checked another switch/Thermostat I think it was high limit. good continuity.
I hope this description will help you have a good picture of my problem and thanks for all the help.
|
|
|
|
Rank: Member
Groups: Registered
Joined: 1/27/2008(UTC) Posts: 55
|
and it used to work better ?
did you check/clean the rest of the exhaust vent (to the outside) ?
try it with the vent disconnected.
is there good air-flow out the vent ?
check the air temp out the back of the dryer (with a meat thermometer) with the dryer empty (wet clothes will take a long time for the dryer to heat to the limits)
it should be about 150F
|
|
|
|
Forum Jump
You can post new topics in this forum.
You can reply to topics in this forum.
You can delete your posts in this forum.
You can edit your posts in this forum.
You cannot create polls in this forum.
You can vote in polls in this forum.
Important Information:
The AppliancePartsPros.com uses cookies. By continuing to browse this site, you are agreeing to our use of cookies.
More Details
Close